you know what it is. no, seriously. you do.
For those of you who have heard, today is the day of the nationwide protest in Jena, Louisiana for the freedom of Mychal Bell and the rest of the Jena 6.
If you’re not totally up on this situation, listening to this hip-hop podcast should remedy that. This show contains, in part, an interview with Brother James Rucker of ColorofChange.org. But that’s not the only voice you’ll hear. A few days ago I posted a call for messages from the community on this situation, and got literally dozens of calls, which I’ve also added into the mix. You’ll hear people from California, Chicago, NYC, South Africa, Canada, London, and beyond. Rappers, filmmakers, label presidents, students, and everything in between.
Hopefully you dig this one. Thanks again to Color of Change, thanks to every single person that called, and every single person that is continuing to get the word about and fight for positive change. As you listen to this, a few thousand of our brothers and sisters are marching the streets of Jena, LA. The least we can do is make spread the word.
Note: To all college/community radio people: This episode is completely FCC clean and ready for airing. If you do download and air this one, I’d appreciate a quick email so I can publicize that on the site. Thanks.
Hip-hop Artists/Personalities that appear in the show:
NYOIL (hear snippets of his “Jena 6″ in the intro and outro)
DJ Mr. King - myspace.com/djmrking
Vell Rob - cdbaby.com/vrob
John Robinson (President of Shaman Work Recordings) - shamanwork.com
Nick Cicero of Cicero Pro Audio - myspace.com/ciceroproaudio
Jahmil XT Qubeka (Filmmaker)
Michael Miraflor of Hip-Hop and Advertising - hiphop-ads.com.
Mad Anthony - Designer madanthonynyc.
Agent M of Blunt Beats Radio bluntbeats.com.
Beats:
Suburb - Untitled (first heard at 0′20)
Mobb Deep - Temperature’s Rising Remix (first heard at 1′55)
Madlib - Mind Touch (first heard at 5′20)
RJD2 - Weatherpeople (first heard at 9′40)
Dilla/Pharcyde - Runnin’ (first heard at 23′55)
Participate in the Campaign.
The Jena 6 campaign at Color of Change - www.colorofchange.org/jena.
Also: Note that Mychal Bell is still in jail. You can send him postcards and letters of encouragement at:
Mychal Bell
Inmate, A-Dorm
LaSalle Correctional Center
15976 Highway 165
Olla, LA 71465-4801
A few moments of your time can really brighten this kid’s day.
Post this on myspace, facebook, email this, whatever it takes.
Free the Jena 6.
Jena 6: Get Your Voice on The Mixtape Show at the mixtape show rap / hip-hop podcast
September 19th, 2007 at 10:11 pm
[...] « MIXTAPE 87 - SPOKEN WORD MIXTAPE 88 - THE JENA 6 [...]
TALAT1
September 20th, 2007 at 5:55 am
thank u FOR THIS i sent the link to everybody i know
Kamika
September 20th, 2007 at 7:34 am
What I don’t understand: why are we saying that the j6 shouldn’t get punished?
Sonja
September 20th, 2007 at 7:48 am
I just want to say that being a native of louisiana, in St. Landry Parish, it’s time for a change. We as young african americans need to stand up for ourselves, and fight for our freedom, peace, and rights. If we don’t who will, cause we are the furture.
Kathryn Peoples
September 20th, 2007 at 2:10 pm
Mychal Bell is still in jail because he can’t raise the bail money, which I believe is $90,000! We should be trying to raise the money to get him out on bail! Hasn’t he been in jail long enough?
Kathryn Peoples
TALAT1
September 21st, 2007 at 7:29 am
im starting to see alot people saying why shouldnt he be in jail…i guess they didnt get the full story or they dont understand why we care.
dex digital
September 21st, 2007 at 4:43 pm
Talat1 - Yeah. Unfortunately the news isn’t giving the full story, so there are a lot of people who don’t understand. I’ve gotten a few emails asking why anyone would care about these kids - I’m wondering if they actually listened to the show or did any research on their own.
Sara
September 22nd, 2007 at 2:58 pm
It’s pretty basic why he shouldn’t be punished. The white kids didn’t get punished did they? They started the entire situation. The kid that went to the Er for his “beating” went to a party the same night. He must’ve been in some serious pain to be having that much fun. I think people also overlook the fact that the original sentencing was for attempted murder. Some white man wanted that kid away for a long time and without reason. Maybe before you question it, you could read the entire story. CNN isn’t giving it to you. Educate YOURSELF.
Mr U
September 23rd, 2007 at 7:15 am
Finally, the Jena 6 get recognised internationally; or the U.K. at least; two days ago, their was a two to three minute article on it at prime time, 10 o’clock BBC news:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtEqQHS31Ts
Sara
September 23rd, 2007 at 7:44 am
This was the first time i saw commentary from a white man in the crowd. It’s amazing the things the choose not to show us in the states.
Jena 6: Where are our hip-hop artists? at the mixtape show rap / hip-hop podcast
September 23rd, 2007 at 7:07 pm
[...] Register « MIXTAPE 88 - THE JENA 6 [...]
MIXTAPE 89 - HELLO CANADA at the mixtape show rap / hip-hop podcast
September 27th, 2007 at 1:12 am
[...] listened just yet, but it’s about the Jena 6. By the way, if you’re looking for the Jena 6 episode, you can click here to listen or here to see the original [...]
CBC interview up, Jena 6 madness continues. at the mixtape show rap / hip-hop podcast
September 27th, 2007 at 11:41 pm
[...] show here, and direct download the show mp3 with me on it here. They did a little mash-up of the Jena 6 podcast, which means that some of you are also on [...]
Mos Def - Shook Ones at the mixtape show rap / hip-hop podcast
October 15th, 2007 at 9:38 pm
[...] as most of you know, a little while back, we all (we meaning the entire community here) put out a little Jena 6 podcast. What most of you don’t know, however, is that while we were speaking out about this issue, a [...]